Film Review
With
The Quatermass Xperiment (1955)
proving to be a massive money-spinner, the British film company Hammer
quickly snapped up the film rights to another Nigel Kneale television
play, a ninety minute BBC drama entitled
The Creature, broadcast live early
in 1955. Kneale was commissioned to write the screenplay and,
having proven himself on Hammer's two
Quatermass
films, Val Guest was assigned to direct what ultimately came to be
titled
The Abominable Snowman.
Soon to become a big name after the success of his first Hammer
feature,
The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957), Peter Cushing was called upon to reprise the lead role he had
taken in the original television play. Forrest Tucker was cast in
the other principal role to help sales of the film in the United
States. What Hammer had thought to be a sure-fire success turned
out to be anything but. But what can you expect when you start
traipsing after mythical beasts in the Himalayas?
The Abominable Snowman is one
of Hammer's more offbeat horror films, more a psychological thriller
than a traditional monster film. The fearsome Yeti are only
glimpsed briefly at the end of the film and our impression of them is
formed by the way in which they are described by the human characters
in the drama, as towering ape-like giants with faces that betray
immense wisdom. We soon realise that the title is intended in an
ironic vein, with man shown to be nature's abomination, not the
supposedly primitive beasts skulking high up in the Himalayas.
The fact that there is a moral subtext makes this an usually
sophisticated film for a company that, by and large, earns its crust
from cheap thrills and even cheaper laughs.
Filmed in the widescreen process Regalscope which Hammer dubbed 'Hammerscope',
The Abominable Snowman makes
effective use of its panoramic snow-covered setting (notice how well
the studio work matches with the location footage shot in the French
Pyrenees). The vast expanse of nothing that fills the screen for
much of the film emphasises the insignificance of the human
protagonists and constantly reminds us that humanity occupies only the
tiniest part in nature's scheme. The icy wasteland becomes an
enemy far more menacing than the supposed Yeti that lurk within it, and
we can almost feel the mental torment of the expedition members as, one
by one, they succumb to their ordeal, which is more psychological than
physical.
After the full colour Gothic spine-chiller that was
The Curse of Frankenstein,
audiences and critics gave a distinctly cold reaction to Hammer's
follow-up. Filmed in black and white, without any of the
traditional horror thrills,
The
Abominable Snowman was a hard sell and did not perform well at
the box office, either in the UK or America. Its comparative
failure led Hammer to turn away from science-based horror and
concentrate on Gothic horror, which became the company's main
breadwinner over the next decade. Although it is consistently
overlooked,
The Abominable Snowman
has a great deal to commend it - the direction is superb, the sets are
magnificent and the performances gripping throughout. There is a
unique feel to this film, haunting and poetic in a way that is hard to
pin down. It deserves to be considered one of Hammer's more
successful attempts at a different kind of horror film, one that draws
menace from a place deep within our psyche - fear not of external terrors
but those that lie within us...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Val Guest film:
The Day the Earth Caught Fire (1961)
Film Synopsis
Dr John Rollason leads a botanical expedition to the Himalayas,
accompanied by his wife Helen and colleague Peter Fox. Staying at
a Tibetan monastery, Rollason becomes excited when he learns that
another expedition, led by the American Tom Friend, will soon arrive,
on a mission to find the Yeti, a prehistoric near-relation of modern
man that has so far eluded discovery. Ignoring his wife's
protestations and a veiled warning from the ancient Lama, Rollason
joins Friend's expedition as it sets out across the snow plains, in
search of what could be the find of the century - if they survive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.